Tom Wanderer wrote:Sure, every once in a while something genuinely authentic or original or subversive manages to sneak through, but generally it's the middling that gets celebrated. And technology seems to be very good at accelerating that and showing us more and more of what we have already seen to the point that we think it's what we like.
Right. It's the technology and the drastically shorter attention spans that have really ramped this up. I'm not even sure something as organic as a Nirvana or even a Pavement could make the kind of dent it once did. Nowadays, "grassroots" often means some jerk that became popular on (fundamentally ad- and click-driven platforms) like YouTube or TikTok.
Even though the scum has always risen to the surface, I feel way, way more assaulted by modern feed culture and the omnipresence of nonsense than I did during the Big Blockbuster Entertainment years of the '80s. Which is part of why I prefer to hang out on this old-style forum, I guess.
penningtron wrote:I buy some of that, but as far as the music we like I think it had more to do with the collapse/acquisition of 'mid tier' record labels, distributors, and press outlets.
And venues (in NYC anyway).
penningtron wrote:As goofy as something like Pitchforkmedia could be in the early 2000s, a lot of people would also be exposed to something like a Black Eyes record or whatever. Now it's a fend for yourself mess for anything that's not very mainstream or established major label acts. With
Bandcamp's inevitable demise your options for large scale music distribution in 2024 could soon be Spotify and Youtube, and that's depressing as fuck.
Sure. I've always disliked Pitchfork but to its credit in the early days, the publication was running reviews of import-only Circle records or Marc Masters-penned writeups of no-wave reissues. Can't imagine much of that happening now.
The thing about so-called gatekeepers is that there was usually still some humanity there. It was still possible (if challenging) to win editors over w/enthusiasm and convince them to take a chance on some freaky shit. It's harder when most "editors" have been replaced by bean-counters, SEO-optimizers, and tech bros.
As for Bandcamp, I am not optimistic. And it's terrible what happened to much of the staff. Has there been any update on the mood or m.o. over there since the early autumn? The material covered in Bandcamp Daily still seems passion-driven and interesting, but I wonder how much longer that can last?
penningtron wrote:Someone noted a few pages back that this board is harder to navigate on smartphones. I believe that point.. but FFS why!? It's a few more clicks and scrolls from a pocket sized device you can use on your patio, a train, or even an airplane shitter. We would have killed for these abilities in 2005.
Hahah, exactly. Although I'm a lousy judge of such things, as I'm still happy to get up off my ass and flip over a double 7-inch record as needed. I actually find that dodging endless digital distractions tends to suck far more time and energy.